The continental connection
German-speaking émigrés and British cinema, 1927-45
By Tobias Hochscherf
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- Format: Hardcover
- ISBN: 978-0-7190-8309-9
- Pages: 256
- Price: £85.00
- Published Date: July 2011
Description
This study is a major appraisal of the contributions of German-speaking émigrés to British cinema from the late 1920s to the end of World War II. Through a series of film analyses and case studies, it challenges notions of a self-sufficient British national cinema by advancing the assumption that filmmakers from Berlin, Munich and Vienna had a major influence on aesthetics, themes and narratives, technical innovation, the organisation of work and the introduction of apprenticeship schemes. Whether they came voluntarily or as refugees, their contributions and expertise helped to consolidate the studio system and ultimately made possible the establishment of a viable British film industry.
Hochscherf talks about such figures as Ewald André Dupont, Alfred Junge, Oscar Werndorff, Mutz Greenbaum and Werner Brandes, and such companies as Korda's London Film Productions, Powell and Pressburger's The Archers and Michael Balcon's Gaumont-British.
Contents
List of illustrations
Acknowedgments
1. Introduction
2. Transnational developments and migrants: the internationalisation
of British studios, 1927-33
Film Europe as prerequisite: transnational networks in European cinema
The thriving film industry in the UK and the UFA crisis
Elstree as centre of immigration: Ewald André Dupont and BIP
A new job for everyone? Immigration and the employment strategies of
British production companies in the late 1920s
Internationalism and the 'unpleasant emotional appeal':
Cosmopolitan émigré films and their reception in Britain
3. Refugees from the Third Reich: 1933-39
British immigration policies and the internment of émigrés
London's émigré community and exile film genres
Émigrés and politics: censorship and propaganda before the war
Émigrés and displacement: Representations of the diaspora and recollections of the Heimat
Resentment and protectionism: Public opinion and the
Association of Cinematograph Technicians (ACT)
4. 'What a difference a war makes': German-speaking 'enemy aliens'
and valuable allies, 1939-45
British anti-Nazi films and German-speaking personnel
Representations of émigrés after the declaration of war
5. Conclusions: The Legacy of German-speaking Filmmakers in Britain
Afterthought: Postwar Émigré Careers and the
Question of Remigration, 1945-49
Sources
Select bibliography
Author
Tobias Hochscherf is Professor of Audiovisual Media at the University of Applied Sciences Kiel in Germany.